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rdchen

I-134 stamp

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I went to my bank to have the I-134 notarized yesterday. Instead of putting the stamp on the I-134 itself, the notary attached a piece of paper & then stamped it. Is this the normal practice? Will it cause any problem at the Guangzhou Consulate? TIA.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: China
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Did the notary sign the I-134? If not, then whats to prove that you simply detached the notary's paper and attached it to another I-134 showing favorable financial information.

If dealing with Guangzhou consulate, I highly recommend that you research the interview process there on "A candle for Love" that board specializes in GUZ, the FAQ pages there have extensive information and list of interview questions. Seems like GUZ prefers to deny visas to anyone who goes there un-prepared.

http://candleforlove.com

Moving this to consulate/embassy forum.

OUR TIME LINE Please do a timeline it helps us all, thanks.

Is now a US Citizen immigration completed Jan 12, 2012.

1428954228.1592.1755425389.png

CHIN0001_zps9c01d045.gifCHIN0100_zps02549215.gifTAIW0001_zps9a9075f1.gifVIET0001_zps0a49d4a7.gif

Look here: A Candle for Love and China Family Visa Forums for Chinese/American relationship,

Visa issues, and lots of info about the Guangzhou and Hong Kong consulate.

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Did the notary sign the I-134? If not, then whats to prove that you simply detached the notary's paper and attached it to another I-134 showing favorable financial information.

If dealing with Guangzhou consulate, I highly recommend that you research the interview process there on "A candle for Love" that board specializes in GUZ, the FAQ pages there have extensive information and list of interview questions. Seems like GUZ prefers to deny visas to anyone who goes there un-prepared.

http://candleforlove.com

Moving this to consulate/embassy forum.

Yes the notary did signed the I-134, but the stamp is on a separate piece of paper that have the standard notary language, i.e. Subscribed and sworn to before me on XX day of XXX nu XXX, etc.

Edited by rdchen
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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: China
Timeline
Yes the notary did signed the I-134, but the stamp is on a separate piece of paper that have the standard notary language, i.e. Subscribed and sworn to before me on XX day of XXX nu XXX, etc.
If notary signed both I-134 and the attached paper, then it probably wont pose a problem.

OUR TIME LINE Please do a timeline it helps us all, thanks.

Is now a US Citizen immigration completed Jan 12, 2012.

1428954228.1592.1755425389.png

CHIN0001_zps9c01d045.gifCHIN0100_zps02549215.gifTAIW0001_zps9a9075f1.gifVIET0001_zps0a49d4a7.gif

Look here: A Candle for Love and China Family Visa Forums for Chinese/American relationship,

Visa issues, and lots of info about the Guangzhou and Hong Kong consulate.

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Share on other sites

Yes the notary did signed the I-134, but the stamp is on a separate piece of paper that have the standard notary language, i.e. Subscribed and sworn to before me on XX day of XXX nu XXX, etc.
If notary signed both I-134 and the attached paper, then it probably wont pose a problem.

Thanks for the quick reply.

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